The Dead Souls, a Russian still life

Project info

The Dead Souls, a Russian still life.

In the alleys of a Russian cemetery, the souls of heroes and artists float amidst the ethereal beauty of the flowers left long ago by the living.

Russian cemeteries are fascinating : they bear the imprint of Soviet times when religious symbols were forbidden and replaced by materialistic representations of the dead. These monuments represented the deceased's professional occupation and their role in the soviet society. No crosses on the tombstones but instead statues or engravings of the dead in full uniform - military, cosmonaut or dancer… Engravings of their tools were often present: pencils,brushes, ballet shoes, tanks, or planes.

For some years the cult of heroes has been actively revived in Russia.
The events in Ukraine and Crimea have weakened the relationship with Europe and the United States and fostered a renewed interest in nationalism.
One of the pillars of the national identity is Russian history, from Peter the Great to the Great Patriotic War (World War 2), celebrated and staged in every public event and in the mass media.

Novodievitchi, in Moscow, since its construction in the sixteenth century and up to present day, has been the cemetery of heroes with more than 20,000 tombs of Russian nobles, artists, intellectuals, scientists and high-ranking military from the Soviet times.

In Russia flowers play a large role in the daily relationship between men and women, and by extension between the living and the dead. Due to the harshness of the climate, in cemeteries flowers are most often artificial and sheltered by weathered glass bells, creating a strange, surrealistic atmosphere.

During my four years in Russia, I tried to capture the Russian cultural identity.
This Russian Soul, aka «Russian Ducha», is alive, beyond folklore, in a geographic space, we are mentally familiar with and in a temporal space, at odds with our occidental chronology : is this really today? or are we back to the 70s or even before…

I started to work with documentary photography of landscapes and people but during the process I felt the urge for more abstraction to approach the artistic sensibility of the Russian soul.

This series is a poetic tribute to the cult of heroes and the veneration of artists in the Russian society.